2010 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 2010 in the United Kingdom

2010 in the United Kingdom
Other years
2008 | 2009 | 2010 (2010) | 2011 | 2012
Countries of the United Kingdom
England | Northern Ireland | Scotland | Wales
Popular culture

Incumbents

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Events

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January

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Satellite photo of Great Britain and Ireland during the cold spell.
  • 3 January – Prime Minister Gordon Brown announces that full body scanners will be introduced at UK airports following the failed attack on Northwest Airlines Flight 253 on 25 December 2009.[1]
  • 5 January – The country is once again deluged by heavy snowfall as it endures its worst cold spell since the winter of 1981–82.[2]
  • 10 January – The Sunday Mirror defence correspondent Rupert Hamer is killed in an explosion in Afghanistan, the Ministry of Defence confirms.[3]
  • 12 January – Alastair Campbell, former government advisor, is interviewed by the Chilcot Inquiry, and said he is prepared to defend "every word" of the September 2002 dossier on Iraq's supposed weapons of mass destruction which led to the invasion of Iraq.[4]
  • 18 January – Following the collapse of strike talks late last year, British Airways cabin crew decides to vote again on possible strike action.[5]
  • 20 January – Unemployment falls for the first time in nearly two years, with the national total for November 2009 dipping by 7,000 to 2,460,000. However, some regions of Britain are still enduring a rise in unemployment, and experts say that the slight reduction in unemployment was largely due to an increase in people taking part-time work and work in occupations largely unrelated to their skills and experience.[6]
  • 26 January – The Office for National Statistics announces that the UK is no longer in recession, with gross domestic product having grown by 0.1%, a weaker rise than many economists had expected.[7]
  • 29 January – Former Prime Minister Tony Blair appears at the Iraq Inquiry and is questioned in public for the first time about his decision to take the United Kingdom to war against Iraq.[8][9]

February

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March

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April

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Leaders of the Main Parties
David Cameron,
Conservative Party Leader.
Gordon Brown,
Labour Party Leader.
Nick Clegg,
Liberal Democrat Leader.

June

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July

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  • 3 July – Christopher Brown, 29, is shot dead in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, by a gunman who badly wounds his 22-year-old girlfriend Samantha Stobbart.
  • 4 July – PC David Rathband is badly wounded in another shooting incident in Newcastle-upon-Tyne. The gunman is reported to be 37-year-old Raoul Moat, who is also named as a suspect for the incident in Gateshead yesterday. Mr Moat had been released from prison on 1 July after spending nine weeks in prison for assault.[75]
  • 5 July – Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg announces that a referendum on introducing the alternative vote system for Westminster elections will be held on 5 May 2011.[76][77]
  • 7 July – The country commemorates the fifth anniversary of the 7/7 bombings, which killed 52 people on 7 July 2005.
  • 9 July – Northumbria police are reported to have found an armed man, believed to be murder suspect Raoul Moat, in the local area and are negotiating with him to persuade him to give himself up.[78]
  • 10 July – The week-long police manhunt for Raoul Moat comes to an end after he shoots himself dead following a six-hour stand off with officers in a field at Rothbury, Northumberland.[79]
  • 11 July – The British Grand Prix at Silverstone is won by Mark Webber with Lewis Hamilton in second place.[80]
  • 14 July – David Cameron condemns individuals who have left tributes to Raoul Moat; floral tributes have been left at the scene of his suicide and a Facebook group has been set up in his memory.[81]
  • 16 July
    • The High Court rules that Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe, jailed for life in 1981 for murdering 13 women and attempting to murder seven others, should never be released from custody. Sutcliffe, now 64, spent the first four years of his imprisonment in a mainstream prison before being declared insane and moved to a secure mental hospital in 1985, where he has remained ever since.[82]
    • Jon Venables is sentenced to two years in prison after admitting distributing child pornography.[83]
    • Economic growth stands at a four-year high of 1.1%, in only the third quarter of economic growth which followed a record six-quarters of detraction.[84]
    • Gavin Grant, a former footballer who played for Millwall, Wycombe Wanderers and Bradford City, is found guilty of a murder committed in Harlesden, London, six years ago.[85]
  • 28 July – The Home Secretary Theresa May announces plans to scrap the use of Anti-Social Behaviour Orders in England and Wales.[86]
  • 29 July
    • The government announces that, as from October next year, employers will no longer have the right to force workers to leave without paying them off once they turn 65.[87]
    • Metro Bank opens its first branch, in Holborn, London, the first wholly new high street bank for more than a century.[88]

August

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September

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October

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November

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December

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Undated

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Publications

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Births

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Deaths

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January

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Neil Christian
 
Thomas Summers West
 
Jean Simmons

February

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Sir John Dankworth
 
Alexander McQueen
 
Cy Grant

March

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Winston Churchill
 
Michael Foot

April

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Corin Redgrave
 
Malcolm McLaren
 
Peter Ramsbotham, 3rd Viscount Soulbury
 
Alan Sillitoe
 
Lynn Redgrave
 
John Shepherd-Barron

June

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15th Duke of Hamilton
 
Stuart Cable
 
Ronald Neame with Judy Garland

July

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James P. Hogan
 
Alex Higgins

August

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Bill Millin
 
Edwin Morgan
 
Peter Gwynn-Jones

September

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Micky Burn
 
Sir Cyril Smith
 
Tom Bingham, Baron Bingham of Cornhill
 
Honor Frost

October

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Sir Norman Wisdom
 
Richard Lyon-Dalberg-Acton, 4th Baron Acton

November

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Peter Hilton
 
Sir Maurice Wilkes
 
Monty Sunshine

December

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John E. Baldwin
 
Tom Walkinshaw
 
Bertie Lewis

See also

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References

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